Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (45 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
9.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
ICD9
  • 298.9 Unspecified psychosis
  • 780.97 Altered mental status
ICD10
  • R41.0 Disorientation, unspecified
  • R41.82 Altered mental status, unspecified
AMEBIASIS
Ben Osborne

Joel C. Miller
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Invasive parasitic infection with both intestinal and extraintestinal manifestations
  • Endemic worldwide, especially areas with poor sanitation
  • Populations at risk:
    • Travelers to, citizens of, and immigrants from endemic areas
    • Institutionalized persons
    • Practitioners of oral–anal sexual activity
    • Men who have sex with men (MSM)
    • HIV infected individuals
  • Risk factors for increased severity of disease and complications:
    • Immunocompromised: Corticosteroid use, HIV infection, malnutrition, malignancy
    • Pregnancy/postpartum state
    • Extremes of age
ETIOLOGY
  • Entamoeba histolytica,
    an anaerobic, nonflagellated protozoa
  • Fecal–oral transmission:
    • Humans are sole reservoir.
  • Ingested organisms cause invasive colitis.
  • Extraintestinal spread is hematogenous.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Intestinal disease:
    • Onset 1 wk to 1 mo postexposure
    • Acute diarrhea (nondysenteric colitis):
      • 80% of cases
      • Afebrile
      • Occult blood in stool
      • Benign abdominal exam
    • Classic dysentery:
      • Bloody mucoid diarrhea
      • Abdominal pain/benign abdominal exam
      • Tenesmus
      • Weight loss
      • Fever (rare)
    • Fulminant colitis:
      • Toxic-appearing patient
      • Rigid abdomen (25%)
      • Fever
      • Severe bloody diarrhea
      • Rapid progression to perforated bowel and frank peritonitis
      • >40% mortality
    • Toxic megacolon:
      • Toxic-appearing patient
      • Profuse diarrhea (>10 stools per day)
      • Fever
      • Distended, tympanitic abdomen with signs of peritonitis
      • Associated with corticosteroid use
      • High mortality
    • Ameboma:
      • Intraluminal granulated mass
      • Tender palpable mass on exam
    • Amebic strictures:
      • Owing to chronic inflammation/scarring
      • Crampy abdominal pain
      • Nausea and vomiting (may be feculent)
      • Partial or complete bowel obstruction
    • Chronic amebic colitis:
      • Mild recurrent episodes of bloody diarrhea, abdominal cramping, and tenesmus
      • Weight loss
      • May persist for years
  • Extraintestinal disease:
    • Amebic liver abscess:
      • Most frequent extraintestinal manifestation (3–9% of cases)
      • Single abscess in right lobe (50–80%)
      • May develop months to years postexposure (median of 3 mo)
      • Fever
      • Right upper quadrant pain
      • Hepatomegaly with point tenderness
      • Rales at right lung base
      • Concurrent diarrhea unusual (20–33%)
      • Complication: Rupture into pleural cavity (10–20%), peritoneum, or pericardium (rare)
      • Increased risk of rupture if >5 cm in diameter or left lobe location
    • Extrahepatic amebic abscess:
      • Brain
      • Lung
      • Perinephric
      • Splenic
      • Vaginal/cervical/uterine
    • Cutaneous amebiasis:
      • Perineum and genitalia
      • Painful, irregularly shaped ulcers
      • Purulent exudate
Pediatric Considerations

Fulminant colitis is more likely

Pregnancy Considerations

Fulminant colitis is more likely

History
  • Possible sources of exposure
  • Membership in high-risk group
Physical-Exam
  • Identify evidence of peritonitis, sepsis, or shock.
  • Tender abdominal mass mandates workup for liver abscess or ameboma.
  • Digital rectal exam shows gross or occult blood in >70% of patients.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC:
    • Leukocytosis in amebic liver abscess and peritonitis
  • Alkaline phosphatase and ALT:
    • Elevated in amebic liver abscess
  • Serum electrolytes, BUN/creatinine if prolonged diarrhea or evidence of dehydration
  • Stool PCR is diagnostic gold standard:
    • 100% sensitive and specific
  • Stool ELISA for
    E. histolytica
    –specific antigen:
    • 74–95% sensitive, 93–100% specific
  • Serum for anti-
    E. histolytica
    antibodies:
    • Essential if suspecting liver abscess. These patients rarely shed parasites in stool
    • 90–100% sensitive in amebic liver abscess
    • 70–90% sensitive in amebic colitis
  • Stool microscopy is <60% sensitive and no longer the test of choice.
  • Fecal leukocytes and culture:
    • Rule out infection of enteroinvasive bacteria;
    • Negative in amebiasis
Imaging
  • Abdominal US:
    • 58–90% sensitive for liver abscess
    • Sensitivity influenced by size and location
    • Evaluate abscess for increased risk of rupture (>5 cm or located in left lobe)
  • Abdominal CT or MRI:
    • Equivalent to US for delineating liver abscesses
    • Superior to US for detecting abscesses in other organs
  • Head CT or MRI:
    • Suspect amebic brain abscess if patient with known amebiasis has altered mental status or focal neurologic findings.
    • Irregular nonenhancing lesions
  • CXR:
    • Elevated right hemidiaphragm and/or right pleural effusion in liver abscess
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Colonoscopy with biopsy provides definitive diagnosis of amebic dysentery, colitis, ameboma, and amebic stricture.
  • Percutaneous fine-needle aspiration of liver abscess to exclude bacterial abscess if nondiagnostic serology or antiamebic therapy fails
    • Not for primary treatment of liver abscesses
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Intestinal amebiasis:
    • Enteroinvasive bacterial infection (
      Staphylococcus, E. coli, Shigella, Salmonella, Yersinia, Campylobacter
      )
    • Inflammatory bowel disease
    • Ischemic colitis
    • Arteriovenous malformation
    • Abdominal aortic aneurysm
    • Perforated duodenal ulcer
    • Intussusception, diverticulitis
    • Pancreatitis
    • Colorectal carcinoma
  • Amebic abscess:
    • Bacterial abscess
    • Tuberculous cavity
    • Echinococcal cyst
    • Malignancy
    • Cholecystitis
  • Cutaneous amebiasis:
    • Carcinoma
    • STDs (condyloma acuminata, chancroid, syphilis)
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Airway, breathing, circulation (ABCs)
  • IV 0.9% NS if signs of significant shock
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Oral fluids if mild; IV if moderate/severe dehydration
  • Avoid antidiarrheal agents.
  • Correct serum electrolyte imbalances.
  • Stool sample for
    E. histolytica
    PCR or ELISA, plus serology for anti–
    E. histolytica
    antibodies
  • If stool or serum is positive for
    E. histolytica
    :
    • Metronidazole or tinidazole is 1st-line drug for systemic amebiasis (90% cure rate)
    • Chloroquine is an alternative systemic agent
    • Always follow systemic therapy with a luminal agent to eradicate intestinal colonization (erythromycin, iodoquinol, nitazoxanide, paromomycin, or tetracycline).
    • Do not use the luminal agents alone
  • If stool or serum is negative for
    E. histolytica
    :
    • Refer to gastroenterologist for colonoscopy with biopsy.
    • Repeat serology in 7 days.
    • Consider empiric course of metronidazole if high suspicion for amebiasis and patient is critically ill.
  • If evidence of peritonitis or sepsis:
    • Add IV antibiotic directed against anaerobic and gram-negative bacteria.
    • Surgery if toxic megacolon or perforation
  • If liver abscess is suspected:
    • US or CT of hepatobiliary system with concurrent amebic serology
    • If imaging demonstrates an abscess but serology is negative, treat with amebicides and repeat serology in 7 days.
    • Consider abscess drainage by surgeon or interventional radiologist in conjunction with amebicidal therapy.
    • If symptoms do not improve after 5–7 days of empiric amebicidal therapy, consider fine-needle aspiration to rule out bacterial abscess or hepatoma.
Pregnancy Considerations
  • Use metronidazole with caution in 1st-trimester pregnancy, but do not withhold if patient has fulminant colitis or amebic abscess.
  • Use erythromycin or nitazoxanide as intestinal amebicides along with metronidazole.
  • Erythromycin or nitazoxanide may be used alone for mild dysentery in 1st-trimester pregnancy.
  • Chloroquine, iodoquinol, paromomycin, tetracycline, and tinidazole are contraindicated.
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
9.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

How to Woo a Widow by Manda Collins
The Midwife's Moon by Leona J. Bushman
Willow by Hope, Donna Lynn
Laura Ray (Ray Series) by Brown, Kelley
The Wyndham Legacy by Catherine Coulter
Healing Hearts by Watters, Kim
Lying in Bed by J. D. Landis